Half Year Results - National Express Group PLC

1 Half Year Results For six months ended 30 June 2017 27 July 2017 Cautionary statement This Review is intended to focus on matters which are relevant...

1 downloads 485 Views 8MB Size
Half Year Results For six months ended 30 June 2017 27 July 2017

Cautionary statement This Review is intended to focus on matters which are relevant to the interests of shareholders in the Company. The purpose of the Review is to assist shareholders in assessing the strategies adopted and performance delivered by the Company and the potential for those strategies to succeed. It should not be relied upon by any other party or for any other purpose. Forward looking statements are made in good faith, based on a number of assumptions concerning future events and information available to Directors at the time of their approval of this report. These forward looking statements should be treated with caution due to the inherent uncertainties underlying any such forward looking information. The user of these accounts should not rely unduly on these forward looking statements, which are not a guarantee of performance and which are subject to a number of uncertainties and other facts, many of which are outside of the Company’s control and could cause actual events to differ materially from those in these statements. No guarantee can be given of future results, levels of activity, performance or achievements

Unless otherwise stated, all operating profit, margin and EPS data refer to normalised results of the continuing Group, which can be found on the face of the Condensed Group Income Statement in the first column. Normalised profit is defined as being the IFRS result excluding intangible asset amortisation and UK rail and restructuring, along with tax relief thereon. Due to the one-off nature of UK rail and restructuring, the Board believes that its removal gives a more comparable year-on-year indication of the underlying performance of the Group. For intangible amortisation, the Board believes that adding back this non-cash item also gives a more comparable year-on-year indication of the underlying performance of the Group and allows better comparison of divisional performance which have different levels of amortisation. The continuing Group is stated, and the prior year restated, before discontinued operations, details of which can be found in note 7 to the condensed interim financial statements. Constant currency basis compares current period’s results with the prior period’s results translated at the current period’s exchange rates. The Board believes that this gives a better comparison of the underlying performance of the Group.

2

1

Financial highlights Chris Davies Group Finance Director 3

H1 2017 Key highlights o

Continued strong performance from our diverse international portfolio of cash generative businesses

o

Both North America and ALSA delivering record half year profits

o

UK performance more mixed reflecting market conditions, but positive reaction to management actions

o

2 acquisitions in Spain in the first half, 1 para-transit acquisition in North America in July o Immaterial contribution to first half results

o

Successful exit from UK Rail reducing risk and focusing capital allocation on higher return markets

o

ROCE increased to 12.0%

o

Remain on target to generate £120m of FCF for 2017

o

Gearing reduced to 2.3x

o

10% increase in interim dividend

4

2

2017 Financial Highlights Strong start to the year Change

Change in Constant FX

1,007.2

+16.2%

+6.5%

93.7

+19.1%

+8.3%

88.9

70.7

+25.7%

+11.0%

Normalised EPS

13.0p

10.9p

+19.3%

Statutory £m

2017

2016

Change

Group statutory operating profit

87.3

77.4

+12.8%

Group statutory PBT

64.6

54.4

+18.8%

50.8

46.0

+10.4%

10.9p

9.2p

+18.5%

Continuing operations £m Revenue Group normalised operating profit Group normalised PBT

Group PAT from continuing operations Statutory EPS Free cash flow Net debt Interim dividend

2017

*2016

1,170.5 111.6

£81.8m

£66.1m

+£15.7m

£873.3m

£802.7m

+£70.6m

4.26p

3.87p

+10.1%

*Restated to exclude UK rail

5

Revenue Recent acquisitions delivering strong growth £m

o o o

Strong revenue increase, up 6.5% in constant currency Organic growth boosted by acquisitions in North America and Spain Positive impact from currency, with £ weaker versus both the US $ and €

6

3

Operating profit Continuing strong growth in overseas divisions Operating profit

Revenue (YOY change*)

*Underlying year-on-year change shown in constant currency **Restated to exclude UK rail

H1 2017

**H1 2016

ALSA

€45.2m

€41.4m

North America

$70.1m

$64.8m

UK Bus

£16.6m

£16.8m

UK Coach

£9.4m

£10.4m

German Rail

€2.0m

€(2.9)m

Centre

£(10.6)m

£(8.7)m

Group

£111.6m

£93.7m 7

Operating profit Strong constant currency growth £m (2)

11 (17) 5

12

9

112 103

94

H1 2016

o o o o

FX

Underlying

Growth

Acquisitions Cost inflation

Cost efficiencies

Other

H1 2017

Operating profit up 8.3% on a constant currency basis Robust organic growth in our overseas businesses boosted by acquisitions Group-wide efficiency programmes largely offsetting inflation £9m benefit on FX, with the weakening of £ versus the US $ and €

8

4

Income statement Double digit reported growth £m H1 2017

H1 2016*

Change

111.6

93.7

+19.1%

(3.9)

0.7

Net finance costs

(18.8)

(23.7)

£4.9m

Profit before tax

88.9

70.7

+25.7%

(21.4)

(14.1)

£(7.3)m

67.5

56.6

+19.3%

13.0p

10.9p

+19.3%

Operating profit Share of results of associates & JVs

Tax Profit after tax EPS o o o o o

Write down of investment in minority stake in Deutsche Touring Group Finance costs down reflecting lower bond interest costs PBT up 11.0% in constant currency, up 25.7% on a reported basis Effective tax rate has risen to 24%, in line with previous guidance 19.3% EPS growth

*Restated to exclude UK rail

9

Superior cash and returns Remain on target to deliver £120m FCF £m EBITDA Working capital Maintenance capex Pension deficit payments

H1 2017

H1 2016

FY 2016

179.9

153.9

344.6

18.0

9.6

(3.1)

(77.4)

(57.4)

(134.7)

(1.4)

(2.8)

(5.5)

Operating cash flow

119.1

103.3

201.3

Tax/interest/other

(37.3)

(37.2)

(62.7)

81.8

66.1

138.6

Free cash flow o o o o

Phasing of working capital – H1 inflow of £18m – do not expect for the full year Full year net capex expected to be between 1.1x to 1.2x depreciation, with a target of £160m-£170m for 2017 Operating cash flow conversion of 108% Free cash flow of £82m in first half; on target to deliver £120m for the full year

10

5

Superior cash and returns Continued focus on investing for future growth £m H1 2017

H1 2016

FY 2016

Cash flow available for growth & dividends

81.8

63.3*

133.7*

Net growth capital expenditure

(3.0)

(15.5)

(27.0)

Net inflow from discontinued operations

29.9

-

-

Acquisitions

(52.9)

(37.6)

(88.8)

Dividends

(42.9)

(39.1)

(58.9)

(8.2)

(28.3)

(91.5)

4.7

(57.2)

(132.5)

(873.3)

(802.7)

(878.0)

Other, including forex Net funds flow Net debt o o o

Growth capex weighted to the second half Disposal of c2c delivering an inflow of £30m £5.7m spent on 2 acquisitions in first half and £45.8m deferred consideration for acquisitions made in 2016

*Cash flow available after exceptional cash flow

11

Foreign currency effects Lapping ‘Brexit’ in second half NEX currency profile

o

Translational impact from movements in USD, EUR, CAD

o

£9m positive PBT impact in H1 – expect FX tailwinds to moderate in second half

12

6

Balance sheet Gearing reduced to 2.3x 2017

2016

Covenant

Ratings

Grade

Outlook

Net debt/EBITDA

2.3x

2.5x

<3.5x

Moodys

Baa3

Stable

Interest cover

8.4x

6.6x

>3.5x

Fitch

BBB-

Stable

Gearing Ratios

o

Net debt decreased to £873m

o

c2c disposal proceeds partially offset by higher first half capex and deferred consideration on acquisitions made in 2016

o

Remain committed to a robust financial strategy: o

Prudent gearing policy: approximately 2-2.5x EBITDA

o

Dividend covered by at least 2x Group earnings

o

Strong commitment to Investment Grade debt rating

o

Prudent risk planning – fuel mostly hedged to 2019 & pension deficit plan in place

13

Balance sheet Significant interest saving & increased liquidity Strong debt maturity profile

512

o

£400m 7 year 2.5% bond issued in November 2016 replacing £350m Jan 2017 6.25% bond

o

Significant interest saving in 2017 through to 2023

o

£494m cash and committed headroom*

400 225 25

44

36

2017

2018

2019

25

Drawn

2020 RCF

83 2021

15 2022

2023

Bond

*Available cash and undrawn committed facilities at 30 June 2017

14

7

Guidance 2017 o

Net maintenance capital expenditure of 1.1x to 1.2x depreciation – 2017 target c.£160-170m

o

Effective tax rate of c.24%, cash tax remaining relatively stable

o

Progressive dividend policy targeting medium-term dividend cover of at least 2.0x Group earnings

o

Lower fuel costs – savings of £6m in 2017, £20m in 2018

o

Full year savings from lower bond interest costs of £9m

o

Free cash flow generation of £120m

15

Business review Dean Finch Group Chief Executive

8

Our strategy is working

o

Excellence driving organic growth

o

Acquisitions delivering strong returns

o

Diversification proving to be a strength

o

Focus on problems and opportunities, quickly and effectively 17

North America Record half year with acquisitions performing well Delivering operational excellence

Generating superior cash & returns

Good bid season for 2017/18 o Strong contract retention – 95% for renewals o Average price increase of around 2.5% across portfolio, nearly 4% on our contracts up for bid and renewal o Acquisitions delivering higher returns o Strong growth in Transit – annualised revenue of $275m including CookDuPage Transportation (CDT), more than doubling in the past 18 months o

Creating new business opportunities

Risk

Acquisition of CDT in July entry into largest single paratransit market (Chicago) o Strong pipeline

o

o

Driver wage pressure of 5%

2017

2016

Revenue

$683.9m

$630.6m

Op profit

$70.1m

$64.8m

10.3%

10.3%

Margin

Revenue: +8.4% in constant currency, with good organic growth together with bolt-on acquisitions Profit: +8.2% - margin remains above 10% and in line with last year, reflecting strong returns from acquisitions and despite cost pressures from driver wages, a lower number of operating days and adverse weather

18

9

Acquisitions delivering expected returns o

o

o

Delivering returns of between 15-20% Continued focus on capital discipline and rigorous screening to maintain return thresholds 2 small acquisitions made in first half 2017 (Odier & Santo Domingo); acquired Cook-DuPage Transportation in July, entry into para-transit market in Chicago

19

ALSA Record half year with RMS driving strong long-haul performance Delivering operational excellence

Generating superior cash & returns

1m more passengers this year, with a particularly strong performance in Spanish long-haul o RMS driving revenue, volume and yield o Improving outlook for concession renewals with greater emphasis on quality, a key differentiator for ALSA o Won Madrid – Guadalajara, scoring over 97% for quality o Received a number of awards including BCI Best Customer Experience for Transport Industry o

Creating new business opportunities o

2 acquisitions o Odier – synergies with Alpybus in Switzerland o Santo Domingo – Urban bus in Madrid

Risk

o o

Further competition from rail Intercity concession renewal (further delays)

2017

2016

Revenue

€369.9m

€344.4m

Op profit

€45.2m

€41.4m

12.2%

12.0%

Margin

Revenue: +7.4% - strong growth in Spain benefitting from RMS and the acquisitions in Spain & Switzerland, more than offsetting a weaker performance in Morocco Profit: +9.2% - Margin up 20bps reflecting strong underlying growth in Spain combined with benefit of acquisitions from 2016/2017, including a strong first ski season from Alpybus

20

10

ALSA RMS driving incremental growth & returns o

o

o

o

Enhanced RMS providing greater accuracy on forecasting demand

Long haul 9 main corridors H1 2017 v 2016

Delivering passenger growth on off-peak services and optimising price on peak services Strong growth in revenue, passenger volumes & yield Seeing an increase in yield on premium services - average fare 70%-130% higher than standard services

o

Utilisation improving, up 3% in first half

o

€/Km up 4.0%

21

ALSA Better outlook for concession renewal o

o

o

o

Bidders to present an economic sustainability study, including passenger demand data

Bid criteria for long haul concessions

Changing emphasis, with greater proportion of score now related to technical/quality elements versus price/fare New methodology on rating technical element allowing a larger differential on scoring between bidders, particularly on safety – favours quality New formulas for price and mileage – discourages aggressive bids, limiting the differential between average & best bid to just 5 points

35

45

45

35 10

10

10

10

Previous ITT

Proposed ITT

Other criteria

Mileage

Technical offer

Fare

22

11

UK Coach Good first quarter but recent terror attacks impacting Delivering operational excellence

Generating superior cash & returns

Core revenue growth impacted by terrorist attacks Responding through RMS - focus on retaining market share o Management actions – network efficiencies & targeted savings of £3m o Further website enhancements e.g. launching seat reservations o Acquisition of Clarkes integrating well – seasonally second half weighted with full programme of summer tours o

2017

2016

Revenue

£136.1m

£133.8m

Op profit

£9.4m

£10.4m

6.9%

7.8%

o

Margin

Creating new business opportunities

Risk

New rewards programme with Webloyalty o New partnerships: Unidays and Cardlytics o

o

o o

Revenue: Core down slightly, impacted by the terror attacks and ongoing competition First time contribution from Clarkes driving revenue growth Profit: Down £1.0m, reflecting technology investment and yield pressure, mitigated by network optimisation and overhead savings

Advanced fare discounting in rail Lengthening recovery period from terror attacks

New airport routes 23

UK Coach Impact of terrorism on Core revenue UK Coach core monthly revenue & passenger growth – impact of terror attacks 3.5%

o

Pre-terrorist attacks, core revenue growth averaged +2.4% across January and February

o

Following the 4 attacks over March – June, growth dropped by 6.7 percentage points to -4.3% in June

o

Brussels 2016 attack took 6 months to recover

2017 Growth

1.5% -0.5% -2.5%

Revenue Growth

-4.5%

Passenger Volume Growth

-6.5% Jan

Feb

Mar

Apr

May

Jun

Historical terrorism recovery profile Jun

Jul

Aug

Sep

Oct

Nov

Dec

Jan

---

Feb

Mar

Apr

May

Jun

Brussels Profile (shifted to Jun Start) 7/7 Recovery

24

12

UK Bus Improving trend in Q2 following management actions on fares Delivering operational excellence

Generating superior cash & returns

Robust revenue growth: commercial revenue broadly flat for H1, having been down in Q1 o Lower fare zones delivering a return to passenger growth and revenue growth in Q2 o New technology to drive growth - contactless pay launching on buses in 2017, mobile ticketing seeing rapid growth o

o

Cost efficiency programme - network reviews, headcount, overheads

Creating new business opportunities Alliance with TfWM* Good relationship with new Metro Mayor o Further express services on our Platinum buses o

Risk

o

2017

2016

Revenue

£135.9m

£137.9m

Op profit

£16.6m

£16.8m

12.2%

12.2%

Margin

Revenue: -1.4% driven by lower concessionary revenues, down 3.7%, with commercial revenues improving in Q2 following the introduction of the low fare zones Profit: Profit down 1.2%, with margin flat despite lower revenue, reflecting cost efficiencies & lower fuel costs

Concession income

o

*Formerly known as Centro

25

UK Bus Driving volumes through lower fares Sandwell & Dudley - YoY figures for pre-trial and trial period 3.8% 1.2% 0.4%

0.1% (0.3%) (2.6%) Yield

Passenger volumes

Revenue

o Launched first local fare zone in Q1 in Sandwell & Dudley o Sandwell & Dudley seeing revenue growth improved by 1.2% & patronage by 3.8%, compared to before the trial with 19,000 more passengers per week o Now launched in Walsall, East Birmingham, Solihull & Birmingham University o

Growing off-peak travel - cheaper tickets for short journeys, groups & families 26

13

German Rail Delivering first profit Delivering operational excellence

Generating superior cash & returns

Strong growth in revenue, up 22.7%, reflecting full revenue recognition with catch up from 2016, including latest passenger count data o Post settlement, RME is a profitable contract o Continuing to outperform previous operator on most customer service metrics & investing in further improvements o RRX mobilisation underway – new trains currently being tested o

2017

2016

Revenue

€44.3m

€36.1m

Op profit

€2.0m

€(2.9)m

4.5%

N/A

Margin

Creating new business opportunities Pipeline of German rail opportunities o Targeting up to 4 bids over next 18 months o

o

Risk

o o

Failure to win bids in Germany Mobilisation on new contracts

Revenue: +23% with the strong performance reflecting an element of catch up from the clarification of the revenue sharing position Profit: First profit recorded, boosted by revenue sharing clarification and catch up from 2016

Looking at other international rail opportunities 27

Delivering our strategy Outlook o

Full year expectations remain positive & unchanged 

The business is performing strongly

o

Dividend up 10%

o

Cash generation remains strong

o

Cash availability gives us options for growth

o

Strong pipeline of opportunities exists, enhanced by exiting UK Rail

o

Improved outlook for Spanish concession renewals

o

Outlook for 2018 is positive

28

14

Q&A

Appendix 30

15

H1 2017 constant currency revenue growth Revenue

Volume

Yield

6% (6)% New 7%

3% (2)% -

3% (4)% -

(1)% (4)% (1)%

(2)%

1%

UK Coach Core NE network Total

0% 2%

0%

0%

German Rail1

23%

(2)%

25%

ALSA Spain Morocco Switzerland Total North America

8%

UK Bus Commercial Concession Total

1

Includes the catch-up element from revenue recognition for revenue sharing in 2016

31

ALSA – operating profit bridge ALSA

H1 2016

Revenue 2017

Growth

M&A

Cost inflation

Cost efficiencies

H1 2017

32

16

North America – operating profit bridge North America

Revenue 2017

$11m

$4m

($2m)

($2m) ($11m)

$5m

$70m

$65m

H1 2016

Growth

M&A

Operating days

Cost inflation

Cost efficiencies

Weather

H1 2017

33

UK Bus – operating profit bridge Bus

Revenue 2017

£1m

(£2m) £17m

H1 2016

(£3m)

Organic growth

Cost inflation

£4m

Cost efficiencies

£17m

Fuel

H1 2017

34

17

UK Coach – operating profit bridge Coach

H1 2016

Revenue 2017

Growth/ new routes

Terrorism

Cost inflation

Cost efficiencies

H1 2017

35

Risk management Fuel risk largely fixed until 2019 Fuel hedging 2017

2018

2019

2020

% hedged*

100%

93%

77%

30%

Price per litre

44.4p

34.0p

34.6p

33.6p

o

Significant fuel savings expected and largely secured for 2018

* Of addressable volume (c.220 million litres)

36

18

Foreign currency effects Effect of fluctuations on profit and debt Effect of a 1% weakening of £

Operating profit (£m) EBITDA (£m) Debt

USD

EUR

1.0

0.9

1.6

1.4

(4.0)

(3.5)

o Translational impact from movements in USD, EUR, CAD o Hedging achieved by matching local currency debt to EBITDA

H1 average rates versus £ 2017

2016

USD

1.26

1.43

EUR

1.16

1.28

37

Risk management Pension deficit plan in place through to 2020 Pensions £m (IAS19) 680 692

679 677

679

754 626

715 Assets Liabilities Asset Ceiling Surplus/Deficit

(12)

2014

£m UK Bus UK Group

(15) (13)

(13)

(88) H1 2017

2016

2015

(89)

Surplus /(Deficit) H1 2016

Surplus /(Deficit) 31 Dec 2016

Profit /(charge) H1 2016

Profit /(charge) H1 2016

(124.9)

(128.5)

(2.0)

(1.8)

39.8

44.5

-

-

38

19

National Express Group PLC

20